London, 1722, 2nd edition. 1722. Second Edition, Disbound. Very Good Condition. Also includes Anglesey, Denbighshire and Flintshire. Note; this is an original article separated from the volume, not an offprint or reprint. Folio. 74 pages, with 35 text figures. Missing all other plates and maps. Slight staining on the bottom corner edge of the pages. Pages 830-840 have minimal damage from bookworm to the left hand side. Disbound. Quantity Available: 1. Category: Camden's Britannia; Printed before 1800; Inventory No: 162346.

Archaeological Journal, Volume 30, 1873. 1873. First Edition, Disbound. Very Good Condition. This is an original article separated from the volume, not a reprint or an offprint. Octavo. 3 pages + 1 plate. A Disbound article. some spotting, A Disbound article. Quantity Available: 1. Category: Archaeological Journal; Inventory No: 153899.

Archaeological Journal, Volume 30, 1873. 1873. First Edition, Disbound. Very Good Condition. This is an original article separated from the volume, not a reprint or an offprint. Octavo. 3 pages + 1 plate. A Disbound article. some spotting, A Disbound article. Quantity Available: 1. Category: Archaeological Journal; Inventory No: 199816.

Archaeological Journal, Volume 7, 1850. 1850. First Edition, Disbound. Very Good Condition. This is an original article separated from the volume, not a reprint or an offprint. Octavo. 8 pages + 3 plates. A Disbound article. some spotting. A Disbound article. Quantity Available: 1. Category: Archaeological Journal; Inventory No: 199265.

Archaeological Journal, Volume 7, 1850. 1850. First Edition, Disbound. Very Good Condition. This is an original article separated from the volume, not a reprint or an offprint. Octavo. 8 pages + 3 plates. A Disbound article. some spotting. A Disbound article. Quantity Available: 1. Category: Archaeological Journal; Inventory No: 153345.

London, House of Commons. 1853. 29pp. Folio. Paper wrappers. British Parliamentary Paper. HC 328. A clean copy. Contains Memoranda by Mr. John Shaw Lefevre, Letter from the Bishop of St. David's.Report from the Ecclesiastical Commissioners Solicitor and a Report from their Estates Committee.

Antiquity, 1940. First Edition, Disbound. Very Good Condition. 14 pages, 6 figures and 5 plates. Note; this is an original article separated from the volume, not an offprint or a reprint. Size: Octavo (Standard book size). Quantity Available: 1. Category: Antiquity; Inventory No: 242692.

The Long Cairns Of The Brecknockshire Black Mountains. By W. F. Grimes, M.A., F.S.A. (Reprinted by permission of the Editor from 'Archaeologia Cambrensis', December, 1936.)

Cardiff: William Lewis Printers (Ltd.), Penarth Road, 1937 . 0. A very good original publication. 4to. pp.28. 10.0" x 7.75". Brown card covers with printed title. Lightly rubbed and soiled, with previous owners signature to top corner: "Dowding - Brecon 1964." Clear English text throughout, well illustrated with plans and black & white pictures. Just a few neat ink annotations to margins and some plans (to aid navigation). VG. ** "William Francis Grimes (1905 – 1988): Professor Grimes, was a British archaeologist and Prehistorian who devoted his career to the archaeology of London. He was the first archaeologist to be employed full-time on rescue archaeology. He was born in South Wales and read classics at the University of Wales before going on to a master’s degree on the Legionary Fortress at Holt in Denbighshire. He joined the National Museum of Wales as Assistant Keeper of Archaeology in 1926, until 1938 when he left to join the Ordnance Survey Archaeology Section. This continued to be his official post until 1945, but at the outbreak of the Second World War he was seconded to the Ministry of Defence to record and excavate archaeological sites threatened with destruction because of wartime defence requirements. In 1956 he became director of the Institute of Archaeology in the University of London. During this time he carried out dozens of excavations in the city in his capacity as director of both the Museum of London and the Institute. Grimes’ most famous discovery was the London Mithraeum in 1954, a Roman temple to the god Mithras, uncovered during rebuilding work on a central London bomb site off Walbrook. Although the site was built over, Grimes succeeded in salvaging many of its finds and features including marble statuary attesting to the wealth of its congregation. As a result of public pressure a replica temple was rebuilt elsewhere. In Surrey, Grimes excavated a Neolithic occupation site at Mixnam’s pit, Penton Hook, Thorpe in 1944-5. His many publications include Excavations on Defence Sites 1939-45 in 1960 and The Excavation of Roman and Medieval London in 1968." - See exploringsurreyspast.

Glanusk Park, near Crickhowell, Brecknockshire. The House of the Bailey family. Antique Colour Print.

William MacKenzie, London [c.1860]. 1860. First Edition, Print, Illustrated by: Alexander Francis Lydon. Very Good Condition. An original 1860 colour print measuring 8 x 10.5 inches (image 5 x 7.5 inches), from Morris' work A Series of Picturesque Views of Seats of the Noblemen & Gentlemen of Great Britain and Ireland, together with the accompanying two page text. In fine, unmarked condition; ideal for framing. Printed using the coloured woodblock process known as Baxter Printing, by Benjamin Fawcett of Driffield, these bright and attractively coloured prints are often mistaken for chromolithographs. It has been noted that the printing is so subtle that it gives the appearance of a watercolour (Friedman, 1978). Illustrator: Alexander Francis Lydon. Quantity Available: 1. Category: Morris' Seats; Inventory No: 118027.

Glanusk Park, near Crickhowell, Brecknockshire. The House of the Bailey family. Antique Colour Print.

William MacKenzie, London [c.1860]. 1860. First Edition, Print, Illustrated by: Alexander Francis Lydon. Very Good Condition. An original 1860 colour print measuring 8 x 10.5 inches (image 5 x 7.5 inches), from Morris' work "A Series of Picturesque Views of Seats of the Noblemen & Gentlemen of Great Britain and Ireland", together with the accompanying two page text. In fine, unmarked condition; ideal for framing. Printed using the coloured woodblock process known as Baxter Printing, by Benjamin Fawcett of Driffield, these bright and attractively coloured prints are often mistaken for chromolithographs. It has been noted that the printing is so subtle that it gives the appearance of a watercolour (Friedman, 1978). Illustrator: Alexander Francis Lydon. Quantity Available: 1. Category: Morris' Seats; Inventory No: 034022.